Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 66, 13 January 1910 — Page 4

THE RICHMOND PALLADIU3I AND SUX-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1910.

PAGE FOUR.

The Richmond Palladium and San-Telegram Published and owned by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Issued 7 day each week, evenings and Sunday morning. Office Corner North th and A streets. Home Phone 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA.

Radolvb. O. Leeda Editor Ckarlea M. Morsaa. . .Manaslns Editor Carl Bernhardt Aaaoelate Editor W. R. Foaadatoae Newa Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. In Richmond 5.00 per year (in advance) or 10c per week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. One year. In advance ''22 Six months. In advance 2.60 One month, In advance 45 RURAL ROUTES. One year, tn advance 12. SO Six months, In advance 1.60 Olio month, in advance 25 Address changed as often as desired; both new and old addresses must be given. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be given for a specified term; name will not be entered until payment is received. Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post office as second class mall matter. Tfcv Association of (New York City) hat eertUie- to tie afralattM Oaly tkm Haves at la Its mart hj the AseeeUttoa. Items Gathered in , From Far and Near Sausage Days. From the Columbus, O., State Journal. These are the days for sausage. There is no use for a person to stick up his nose at sausage, for sausage is good when it is made right. It is the response of the food world to the polar breeze that blows through the morning. It is as sweet as a plate of strawberries on a mild June day. But it must be made right. Good sausage is an art product. It is made up of judgment, taste and skill. It is a combination of ingredients that correlate with one another as the fragrance and the blush of the rose. The butcher doesn't understand this. Generally he throws in some scraps and odd3 and ends, and especially the odds, dabs on some salt, pepper and sase, grinds it out, and the confiding customer buys it because it it sausage. He doesn't like it very well, but he eats it, and everything goes. The other day we saw a customer in a meatshop direct the making of his own sausage. He selected the meat, simon-pure cuts off the best parts, had it ground, and took it home to season It there. That man knows how to take care of himself. He knows art from a bull's foot. He appreciates the true sentiment of sausage. How Worlds Are Made. From the Omaha Bee. It will be six weeks before the naked eye can see Halley's comet, but In the meantime any slippery sidewalk will produce a galaxy of constellations without a moment's notice. Could Settle It. From the Indianapolis News. But surely the University of Copenhagen could give an unprejudiced verdict on the difference between the partisans of "Dixie" and "Yankee Doodle." Not That Bad. From the St. Paul Dispatch. The report that Mr. Bryan had canceled his speaking engagements on account of illness proves to have been erroneous.' Mr. Bryan never gets that ill. Manchuria and the Philippines. From the Washington Star. Those Japanese newspapers which, in opposing Secretary Knox's proposition for neutralizing the Manchurian railways, ask if America would consent to the neutralization of railways in the Philippines institute a remarkable comparison. America owns the Phllippnes. She is supreme there. She controls everything, and will develop the islands according to her and their interests. She need not, and will not, consult other powers on that score. Japan holds no such relations to Manchuria, and the 1 great powers do not expect her to acquire them. That province is Chinese territory, with the open door guaranteed to all the world. TWINKLES (By Philander Johnson) Not the Worst. "I must confess that I don't sleep well while traveling by train," said Mr. Chuggins. "I had a terrible dream last night." "I understand they had some trouble on the road." "Yes. I dreamed my motor car ran over an embankment, smashed the engine and tore the transmission out by the roots. You can't imagine how relieved I felt when I awoke and found it was only a railway collision." Locating the Blame. The mercury falls till near zero it lies And we're tired of its frigid precision; The climate, we're solemnly moved to surmise, Is a victim of downward revision. "Tryin' to lead a life of ease an' pleasure," said Uncle Ebvsn, "is like follerin' a brass band. It's fun fob. awhile, but It don git you nowberes." A Sweeping Summary. "You don't five Mr. Grafton Grabb

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credit for being a high type of statesman." "No," answered Farmer Corntossel. " 'Pears to me he's sort of out-o-date; one of them old-time fellers that thinks through their pocketbooks an talks through their noses."

Difficult Distinction. 'That man complains of overwork." "He makes a common mistake," said the philosopher. "Where we are personally concerned it is hard to distinguish overwork from under-capacity. Stimulation by suggestion. I love to have my doctor call And gravely look me o'er; The cough, the cold, the ailment small Which bothered me before Seemed petty, though annoying things Until he swiftly came And unto each derangement flings Its scientific name. Ah, then what pride uplifts my mind To hear those words set free, Vast as the mutterings of the wind Or murmurings of the sea! And in my heart strange hopes begin To leap, of lasting fame There is a heap-of comfort in A scientific name. Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copy.ight, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye GODL1KENESS. Cherry, Illinois That date line was a familiar one to readers of the newspapers a few weeks ago and associated iu the public mind with sickening stories of the mine disaster. But Along with the sordid horror of it all the deaths in the passages by suffocation, by tire, by drowning, by starvationwas the record of the fine, everyday heroism that always comes uppermost In such crises. Who were these miners? Well, most of them were foreigners or naturalized Americans, and they were rough and uncouth. Perhaps you thought of them as hundreds of poor human rats penned in the muck of the mine, singed to their death by the fires. Also The men wbo worked at the shaft on top and risked their lives in the mine levels firemen, miners, workmen were men rough on the outside of tbem. Rough only on the o.utside! Did you read about these strong but tender hearted men who made rescue dashes, fighting fires, attacking barricades, until they fell exhausted, in order to restore the burned and battered bodies to wives or babes? And of how some of the early volunteers were dead when hoisted? OrDid you read the diary of that boy of twenty-one who calmly told the story of each day's suffering in that bell below, closing the last day with a benediction on his sweetheart? Or Of how they found farewell notes In the pockets of the dead, which spoke not of despair, but of that "some sweet day" when they should all meet again ? Or Did you read of those who stood constant guard over the dying miner and his little "water hole" a depression in the coal where a few black drops seeped in themselves perishing of thirst? . What godllkeness in man! t You sometimes doubt it? You see the seamy side of things, question men's motives, see only the littleness of humans and lose faith. Turn the shield around. You will then see the godllkeness in the commonest man and how it comes out of him at the dire need of his fellow. Says a popular woman writer, "Don't you Just love human beings?" The Way Ho Got the Answer. Railway porters in the town of Crewe seem to have a curious habit of answering tbe question you do not ask them. The experience of a correspondent of the Manchester Guardian is a case in point. At the station entrance he asked, "When is the next traiu to Manchester?" The reply was. "Platform 5." He went to platform 5 and repeated his question, and the answer was. "Other end of tbe platform." Yet again he asked, "When is the next train to Manchester?" and got "First train after the next on this side." In desperatiou he altered the form of the question to, "Where shall I get the Mauchester train?" And theu he got the reply he had wanted all the time "Six twenty-five, sir." THE BOUDOIR OF A FAT WOMAN. What do we sec? Terrifically long and austere looking corsets: tiny (as possible1! shoes, tippers bulging over the vamps; various restrainers. retainers, .letainers (names unknown); perspiration disinfectants: blackhead ei-fuiicators; pimple specifics; blood medicine. Strewed around a few candy boxes; maybe an exerciser on the wall. fhes "properties" sigrnify that at various times this pleasant room is the scene of fashionable tortures, of heart-burnings, of fallings from grace. Here the poor lady gasps into her retainers, her harness. Here she hides her fat-caused pimples. perspiration, blackheads; here, when her spirit is weak, she forsakes the exerciser for the deadly candy bos. What a life what a four-flush! Avoidable? A Marmola Prescription Tablet taken after each meal and at bedtime, will reduce that fat (a pound a day) down to the firm flesh beneath; banish the fat-caused blemishes; give a license to eat all the candy, etc., craved, and sleep as long as one desires. Investigate; tender seventvfive cents to your druggist for a large case, or write the Marmola Co.. S95 Farmer Bldg.. Detroit. Mich. Do not be timid Marmola Tablets are safe being made strictly in accordance with the famous, fashionable formula: 4 os. Marmola. oi. FL Ex. Cascara Aromatic. 3 oi. Peppermint Water; consequently, so ahead without fear. A month will emancipata you.

Next Educational Step of State An Article Appearing in December Number of the EducatorJournal, From the Pen of W. S. Hiser, Richmond.

Happy the man who has the town escaped! To him the whistling trees, the murmuring brooks. The shining pebbles preach Virtue's and wisdom's lore. Goethe. "Agriculture is the greatest among arts, for it is first in supplying our necessities. It is the mother and nurse of all other arts. It favors and strengthens population; it creates and maintains manufactures, gives employment to navigation and materials to commerce. It animates every species of industry, and opens to nations the surest channels of opulence. It is also the strongest bond of well regulated society, the surest basis of internal peace, the natural associate of good morals." In 1892 the state of Wisconsin began an experiment in agricultural education m the founding of the county school of agriculture. ; In 1899 Hon. L. D. Harvey, State Superintendent of Public Instruction, was appointed commissioner to investigato the rural school systems of other states and of foreign countries, The object of this investigation was to determine the best method of introducing agriculture, manual training and domestic economy into the common schools of the state of Wisconsin. Tn his report to the legislature of 1901. the commissioner recommended. ; among other things, that two county schools of agriculture and domestic

economy be provided for. The legis- j is carried on largely by the teachers lature thereupon enacted a law au-j in the County Agricultural school. Inthorizing the establishment of two diana needs more agricultural teach-

such schools. Marathon and Dunn counties built and equipped schools, which opened in the fall of 1902. The Marathon county school opened October fi, 1902, being the first school of its kind opened in the United States. The legislature of 1901 provided for the payment from the state treasury of one-half of the annual instructional expense of each school; provided that not more than $2,500 be paid. In 1903 the law was amended so that twothirds of the annual cost of maintenance should be paid to each school, provided that $4,000 be the limit of such aid. An experiment in 1902, these schools are an assured success in 1909. Wisconsin may feel proud of her forward step in training her boys and girls of the rural districts. A well laid plan of agricultural education from the district school to the state university is gradually developing. Between the very elementary agricultural instruction of the former and the advanced work of the latter, the county schools of agriculture occupy an important place. That the schools first established are meeting the expectations of their founders is evident from the fact that other counties of the state have established, or are planning to establish similar schools under a revision of the first law. The following states have County Agricultural Schools: Texas 4, Tennessee 10, Minnesota 10. Alabama has provided for 9 agricul tural schools of secondary grade, one in each congressional district. The organization and courses of study of the Indiana schools tend too much to Impress pupils that manual labor is beneath the dignity of educated people. For Instance, in our larger towns and cities our county and city boys and girls go to school , wearing the best clothes, clean linen i and patent leather shoes, doing little or no work in which hand and face become soiled and which requires the wearing of common clothes. Living this sort of life during the most susceptible period of their lives from t! to 18. they feel upon completing their school career that society ought to furnish them a good job at which they need not dirty their hands nor soil their clothes, and at a paying salary. You are probably aware that the United States Department of Agriculture has some well defined ideas with reference to education for country life which are being put into circulation for the "good of the cause." They are given in this connection in order that you may have before you the other proposed solution cl agricultural education and that a word of caution may be given at the close of their presentation. "A movement is well begun to organize, as a part of our great American school system, the secondary schools so as to meet especially the needs of country life. This movement contemplates that, below and leading to our more than sixty state colleges of agriculture established, we shall have three hundred or four hundred agricultural schools, practically one for each country congressional district of ten or more counties, either separate or as a strong department of an existing institution. '"But vastly more important is the larger movement to establish a system of consolidated rural and village schools, and of courses in agriculture in town and city schools so near the homes of the farm youth that something of instruction in agriculture, in home economies and in social and civic affairs, as well as in the accepted subjects of a so-called general education shall Tip tansht to all the hovs and girls of the farm. To meet this first need the consolidated rural school in the open country and the consolidation of rural schools about the villages and cities is rising rapidly into prominence along with the vocational high school: and many city and nonpublic schools of secondary and higher grade are seeking to add agriculture to their courses of study.The experience in Minnesota, Nebraska, Wisconsin and some other states has shown conclusively that the agricultural high school can aid in curing the weakest spot In the public school system the lack of vocational preparation of those who are to manage the farms and the farm homes. The danger in this plan is that agri-

cultural and industrial work will be a very subordinate part of an already over-crowded high school course of study. These schools organize their courses of study around literature and history. The . county agricultural school, which meets the needs of the hour, organizes its course of study around agriculture. The history and literature in it bears a direct relation to, and is subordinate to agriculture.

Unless this is done we are laying too I little stress on the right education of our farmers' sons and daughters. The temporary farmers institutes are in a very small way to the adult farmer what the permanent agricul tural school is to his son. They were the outgrowth in part of the public meetings of agricultural societies and state boards of agriculture, and jn part 0f the extension work of colleges and universities. The object of these institutes is to bring the workers in the agricultural sciences and the practical agriculturists together occasionally for the discussion of questions of mutual interest. Through such discussion the farmer gets the benefit of the information which the scientist has obtained in the course of his investigations, and the scientist learns what the farmer's needs and difficulties are. The re suits of the practical tests made by the farmer of the scientist's theories are also brought out. By such conferences both classes of workers have their opinions and experience broadened In Wisconsin the couuty "farmers' institute" or corn school of a county ers and lecturers. Read the following from the Richmond Evening Item of Sept. IS. 1909. "No corn school in Wayne Co. Owing to requests from over the sixth district the Purdue instructors selected Greensburg as the place for the holding of the temporary school next year. Owing to the demand on the instructors the university could not lend assistance to an independent movement in this county (Wayne) and was advised to wait a year until 1911." It is not believed that the State Agricultural school, nor agricultural instruction in the rural and elementary school, nor the Farmers' Institute will fully meet the needs of our farmers and particularly their sons and daughters. At present the student who leaves the rural school with the intention of pursuing an agricultural education is very apt to be diverted from his course by the time he has spent four years in a high school which ignores agriculture. If he has not been turned from his course by the completion of this high school education, he will have lost much of his enthusiasm for the farm and lost a part of four years, in time, in the most susceptible period of his life, during which agricultural study and experiments should have received attention. Let us assume that this student goes to Purdue university with dampened enthusiasm for agriculture. Once there, it is apt to be quenched by the impression made by the large shops, massive machinery, mechanical equipment and engineering courses. A case is known where a young man was shamed out of taking the course in agriculture by students taking the engineering courses. A school so distant from the farmer's home must necessarily be too expensive for most of the farmers' children, especially after they have reached an age when their services may be more or less utilized on the farm. What is needed is the county agricultural school nearer their homes to which farmers' children may go to finish their education after they are through with the common schools. The county agricultural school is the big link and the missing link in the chain of agricultural education that Indiana is forging. At the present time the people are turning to farm life as never before. We are beginning to realize that, for independence, comfort, and real enjoyment, the farm offers exceptional opportunities. To excel on the farm, as well as elsewhere, however, one must be trained for his work; and it is to help him acquire this training that the county schools of agriculture are founded. '"Depend upon it, if you would hold your sons and daughters back from Best Hair Tonic All Over America, the News of the Marvelous Dandruff Cures of Parisian Sage Has Spread. A few years ago there was introduced into America a cure for dandruff, falling hair and all scalp diseases. News of the quick action of this wonderful invigorator spread rapidly. And today without any sensational or untrue advertising, Parisian Sage is used extensively in almost every town in America. And what has produced this great demand? Simply this Parisian Sage does just what we are telling the readers of the Palladium and Sun-Telegram it will do. We claim, and we back our claim, with L. H. Fihe's money back guarantee, that Parisian Sage is the most invigorating and rejuvinating hair tonic. It cures dandruff, stops failling hair and itching scalp: it makes the hair grow strong and vigorous, yet soft and lustrous. It is the only hair dressing that reaches the root bulb of the hair and destroys the dandruff germ. And to the women who are reading this simple statement of fact, we want to say that Parisian Sage works wonders with women's hair. It will turn dull harsh and faded hair into beautiful, radiant and lustrous hair in a few days, and is the most pleasant and satisfying dressing any woman ever used. Druggists everywhere and L. H. Fihe sell Parisian Sage for 50c a large bottle.

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33 Days FREE Blood poison can never be cured with mercury or potash. You might as well know this first as last. Medical authorities say so. The most these drugs can do is to drive the blood poison back into the system and smother it for several years. Then when you think you are cured, pitiful mercurj symptoms will break out, and you find that your bones have been rotting all the while. Your teeth will begin to loosen and your tissues, glands, brain and vital organs will show the terrible destructive power of the mercury and potash. Locomotor Ataxia, Paralysis. Imbecility and Premature death are then almost inevitable. Any medical authority will corroborate these statements. The remarkable vegetable Obbac Treatment does not drive in the Blood Poison but drives it out. It positively contains no mineral poisons whatever, so that once cured by the Obbac Treatment you never run the. terrible risk of hav ing your bones soften, your nerves collapse, your teeth fall out. your kidneys dearenerate or your brain weaken. The Obbac Treatment is a marvel, pro ducing remarkable changes in only 30 days. This is why we offer to any blood poison victim living, no matter how bj.d a case, a 30-Day Treatment FREE You want to be cured and cured quick not poisoned with mercury and potasn lor yc;irs. a du-i'ay i reauneni is yours for the askins. You will open your eyes at what it will do for you in a month. We treat you free for a month. Just write to us and get the treatment free. Then If you are satisfied it Is the most remarkable treatment you ever took, you can continue if you wish. Never In your life, will you ever tiirain have such an opportunity for a complete cure, as Is given you by this Great Obbac Treatment This is a square deal. You sign nothing, no notes, makes us no promises, except to take the treatment. The wonderful Wasserman Test, the onlv blood poison test known to scientists, proves that the body is completely purified by the Obbac Treatment, and that mercury and potash do not cure blood poison. Sit down and write to us, giving a full history of your case in detail. We will treat your letter as a sacred confidence. Consultation and advice free. We will send you also the . remarkable hook, "Driving -ut Blood Poison," free. THE OBBAC CO. 1779 Rector Bldg , Chicago, III. roaming away into the perilous centers, you must steadily make three attempts: one, to abate the task work of farming; two, to raise maximum crops and profits, and three, to surround your work with the exhilaration of intellectual progress. You must elevate the whole spirit of your vocation for your vocation's sake, till no other can outstrip it in what most adorns and strengthens a civilized state." The dominating policy of the county school of agriculture is to make the common work of the world (the work that most men and women must do) both profitable and pleasant. Its motto is. Labor is Life. Some part of our school system must lay stress on returning to the farm trained, polished and educated, its noblest product: its boys and girls: its young men and young women, fitted to carry on successfully and enjoy the life they have been wisely led to choose. Happy the man who thus hath 'scaped the town! Him did an angel bless when be was bom The cradle of the boy With heavenly flowers strewed. Goethe. A cup of coffee, a bit of sausage. and Mrs. Austin's Buckwheat cakes is a breakfast fit for a king. A Peculiar Picture. In one of the German picture galler ies is a painting called "Cloudland." It hangs at the end of a long gallery, and at first sight it looks like a huge, repulsive daub of confused color without form or comeliness. As you walk to ward it the picture begins to take shape. It proves to be a mass of ex quisite little cherub faces like those at the head of tbe canvas In Raphael's "Madonna San Sisto." When you come close to the picture you see only an in numerable company of little angels and cherubim. MASONIC CALENDAR. Friday, Jan. 14. King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M. Stated meet ing. Installation of officers. Saturday, Jan. 1.". Loyal Chapter, No. 4.0, O. E. S. Stated meeting. NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that I have sold my business and all property con nected therewith, known as the "Em pire Cigar Store," located in Room No. 712 Main street, in this city, to Verlin J. Sheffer, and that I no longer have any connection with said business, and that the purchaser will continue to conduct said business in said Room. Dated, January 12, 1910. Leslie S. Chenoweth. janl2-3t Moderate Price Glasses We have fitted out over 8,000 persons with spectacles, a large number of which were moderate in price. We use just as much care testing the eyes and fitting steel and gold filled spectacles as with 14K frames and Kryptok Lenses. Daner, Tbe Jeweler 811 Mala St. F. H. EDMUNDS, Optometrist.

POLITIC A L ANNOUNCEMENTS

JOINT SENATOR. WALTER S. COMMONS Candidate for Joint Senator from Wayn and Union counties, subject to Republican nomination. REPRESENTATIVE ELMER S. LAYMOX Candidate for Representative of Wayne County, subject to the Republican nomination. LEE J. REYNOLDS, of Hagerstown. candidate for Representative of Wayne County, subject to the Republican nomination. JOINT REPRESENTATIVE. JOHN C. HARVEY Candidate for Joint Representative, from Wayne and Fayette counties, subject to the Republican Nomination. TREASURER. ALBERT R. ALBERTSON Candidate for Treasurer of Wayne County, subject to Republican nomination. COUNTY SHERIFF JESSE A. BAILEY Candidate for sheriff of Wayue county, subject to the Republican nomination. EZRA N. THOMPSON Candidate for sheriff of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination. LAFAYETTE LARSH Candidate for sheriff of Wayne county subject to the Republican nomination. One term of two years only. OSCAR E. MASHMEYER Candidate for sheriff of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination. COUNTY CLERK. FRANK M. WHITESEL1 Candidate for County Clerk, subject to the Republican nomination. GEO. MATTHEWS Candidate for County Clerk, subject to the Republican nomination. WM. K. CHEESMAX Candidate for County Clerk, subject to the Republican nomination. F. F. RIGGS Candidate for County Clerk, subject to the Republican nomination. W. E. EIKENBERRY Candidate for County Clerk, subject to the Republican nomination. THOMAS R. JESSUP Candidate for Clerk of Wayne County, subject to the Republican nomination. COUNTY CORONER. DR. R. J. PIERCE Candidate for Coroner of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination. DR. MORA S. BULLA Candidate for Coroner of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination. COUNTY AUDITOR. L. S. BOWMAN Of Hagerstown, candidate for Auditor of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomina tion. ALBERT E. MOREL Candidate for Auditor of Wayne County, subject to the Republican nomination. COUNTY ASSESSOR. ALBERT OLER Candidate for Assessor of Wayne county, subject to the Republican nomination. THOS. F. SWAIN Candidate for Assessor of Wayne county, subject to tbe Republican nomination. WILLIAM MATHEWS Candidate for Assessor of Wayne County, subject to the Republican Nomination. COUNTY COMMISSIONER. ROBERT N. BEESON Candidate for Commissioner of Wayne county. subject to the Republican nomln ation for the second term from the Western District, B. H- IJNDERMAN Candidate for Commissioner of Wayne county. subject to the Republican nomin ation from the Middle District. THEODORE P. CRIST is a candidate for County Commissioner (Western District). Subject to the Republican Nomination. Rexall Orderlies A fine flavored little tablet that can be chewed up, and the best remedy for constipation. It is different from all common pills and laxative tablets. While sure in their action they are not severe. Ask for free sample package. One dozen box, lO cents. Three dozen box 25 cents. Adams' Drag Store 6th & Main. The Rexall Store WE HAVE FOR SALE INVESTMENT PROPERTY Good for 10 net Income. WM. H. BRADBURY oV SON. '13 Westcott Block. .

Will Gri :!i milTrfi :1MI LIN 1:1 B?ca w make coanJenUal loan of $10 and upwards 5 and make them cheaper, quicker and better Uiaa anyone e-ee. because we are honest with oar customer. we are building up a larger and better business eeery d. VVe want ail theHuineaa we can get. We want Tour bnaineM .provided yom need oar kind cf eerrtcev. W e hehcre aa lavestigauca of our method will get it. We make loan in a clean, straightforward manner pavable in mail. caay-W-make weekly pajmeau. 5 INDIANA LOAN CO. t 3rd Floor Colonial Bldg, PHONE 1341. ROOM 40. RICHMOND. TRY JUST ONE BOTTLE OF COMMONS' PlfflE RULK We might tell you that we produce and handle our milk, scientifically that we are 6ure it Is pure, because we watch it from the time it Is produced until it is delivered but give it a trial and you will say you can ask for nothing better. Our wcQons pass your Commons oairy Company 9 S. 5Q St. The Rower Sbop 111. Ltela SL Pfcs-3 K32 Poultry Feed THE GOOD UNO That mokes them cockle RICHMOND FEED STORE 11-lSN.tth Phone UM ESTABLISHED IN 1S31 HATCHES No more appropriate time for buying a watch than January, tbe month of new resolutions and good intentions. Resolve to be on time. Own a watch of your own one that you can rely on one that will give you tbe satisfying feeling of being accurate to the minute. Our watch stock will afford you a selection from a large range of designs. Movements of all the reliable makes, each bearing our ironclad guarantee. 0. E. DICKINSON Watch Kepalrlafj IHamooaa ftlomntea PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.

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